Hoar-frosted trees all day
Foxes fleeing from the spectacle
Of fireworks from last year
I suspect there are many more christmases of Lego and board games in our future. Hopefully lots of weekends too.
Sleep, eat, sleep, repeat. With occasional intermissions to try to convince the kids (at no volume) to cooperate.
The gasp moment is amazing, but watching the kids give each other presents is also great for heart swells.
Christmas Eve: clean the house, bake all the things, last minute fix for present mixup.
And then baked goods and video games.
Banana, making plans to hug Santa, then get up, go pee, wash hands, dry hands, get dressed, and then go downstairs to say BOO and scare Santa. And then read him the night before Christmas…
Well… the observant one did notice the firefighters. But apparently didn’t think they were worth mentioning until we brought it up.
You read me It Was The Night Before Christmas whenever you want. You don’t even need to hold the right book.
Banana has picked up her next batch of expressions and heaven help us in our quest to not giggle at inopportune times.
Shovel for the dozenth time, finish tiny clubhouse.
Stare at the list of baking aspirations.
Thursday levels of exhaustion and the trial of an unseamly favourite sweater would have been hard for our dear boy on their own, even without a winter concert. I suspect he’ll be more excited about it in retrospect.
It is almost funny watching your kid hold off on being sick until the moment her birthday party is over.
Tough tooties, the three year old says.
And suddenly you wonder whether it was really worthwhile abstaining from swearing in front of the children.
We have a tree, we added a new year to the spreadsheet, and we started the clubhouse. It’s officially Christmas season.
Only Lizard would start to feel sad about not being able to have more cake while actually eating cake (that she couldn’t finish).
Putting the kid to bed for her last sleep as a seven year old. Feeling a little bad that she doesn’t have fancier parents. Although less pandemic would go a long way to helping her have more excuses to dress up.
Maybe one of our quarter day celebrations will require dressing for dinner, just for that kid.
I guess if you don’t watch movies all that often, it just makes sense to watch something that was cut down from at least two movies long. It’s practically a two for one deal.
You can tell me as many times as you like that you’re a little bigger now, but I’m still not letting you play with tiny beads unsupervised.